Hearing Systems Group, Department of Electrical Engineering, Technical University of Denmark, Building 352, Ørsteds Plads, 2800 Kgs. Lyngby, Denmark; Danish Research Centre for Magnetic Resonance, Centre for Functional and Diagnostic Imaging and Research, Copenhagen University Hospital Hvidovre, 2650 Hvidovre, Denmark.
Hearing Systems Group, Department of Electrical Engineering, Technical University of Denmark, Building 352, Ørsteds Plads, 2800 Kgs. Lyngby, Denmark; Danish Research Centre for Magnetic Resonance, Centre for Functional and Diagnostic Imaging and Research, Copenhagen University Hospital Hvidovre, 2650 Hvidovre, Denmark.
Neuroimage. 2017 Dec;163:398-412. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2017.07.057. Epub 2017 Jul 31.
Musicians are highly trained to discriminate fine pitch changes but the neural bases of this ability are poorly understood. It is unclear whether such training-dependent differences in pitch processing arise already in the subcortical auditory system or are linked to more central stages. To address this question, we combined psychoacoustic testing with functional MRI to measure cortical and subcortical responses in musicians and non-musicians during a pitch-discrimination task. First, we estimated behavioral pitch-discrimination thresholds for complex tones with harmonic components that were either resolved or unresolved in the auditory system. Musicians outperformed non-musicians, showing lower pitch-discrimination thresholds in both conditions. The same participants underwent task-related functional MRI, while they performed a similar pitch-discrimination task. To account for the between-group differences in pitch-discrimination, task difficulty was adjusted to each individual's pitch-discrimination ability. Relative to non-musicians, musicians showed increased neural responses to complex tones with either resolved or unresolved harmonics especially in right-hemispheric areas, comprising the right superior temporal gyrus, Heschl's gyrus, insular cortex, inferior frontal gyrus, and in the inferior colliculus. Both subcortical and cortical neural responses predicted the individual pitch-discrimination performance. However, functional activity in the inferior colliculus correlated with differences in pitch discrimination across all participants, but not within the musicians group alone. Only neural activity in the right auditory cortex scaled with the fine pitch-discrimination thresholds within the musicians. These findings suggest two levels of neuroplasticity in musicians, whereby training-dependent changes in pitch processing arise at the collicular level and are preserved and further enhanced in the right auditory cortex.
音乐家经过高度训练能够辨别细微的音高变化,但这种能力的神经基础仍知之甚少。目前尚不清楚这种依赖于训练的音高处理差异是否已经出现在皮质下听觉系统中,或者是否与更中心的阶段有关。为了解决这个问题,我们结合心理声学测试和功能磁共振成像,在音高辨别任务中测量音乐家和非音乐家的皮质和皮质下反应。首先,我们估计了具有谐波成分的复音的行为音高辨别阈值,这些谐波在听觉系统中要么是可分辨的,要么是不可分辨的。音乐家的表现优于非音乐家,在两种情况下都表现出较低的音高辨别阈值。相同的参与者进行了与任务相关的功能磁共振成像,同时他们执行了类似的音高辨别任务。为了考虑音高辨别中的组间差异,任务难度根据每个个体的音高辨别能力进行了调整。与非音乐家相比,音乐家对具有可分辨或不可分辨谐波的复音表现出更强的神经反应,特别是在右半球区域,包括右颞上回、Heschl 回、岛叶、额下回和下丘。皮质下和皮质的神经反应都可以预测个体的音高辨别表现。然而,下丘的功能活动与所有参与者的音高辨别差异相关,而不仅仅是在音乐家组内。只有右听觉皮层的神经活动与音乐家的精细音高辨别阈值相关。这些发现表明音乐家存在两种水平的神经可塑性,其中依赖于训练的音高处理变化发生在丘脑中,并在右听觉皮层中得到保留和进一步增强。